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  B-24 Liberator Lady Be Good
Posted by: sixgun - 11-13-2011, 06:06 AM - Forum: OTHER WWII UNIT STORIES AND INFO - Replies (3)


The saddest part of this video is reading the diary, you may wonder, if you read it, he says "no help yet, no help" was he going to right more or did he die writing it,,

This is a sad story, were they all found together or did they all die in different places?

 

 

 

Vee

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  Happy Birthday John O
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 11-10-2011, 10:08 AM - Forum: Shooting the Breeze - Replies (1)


Happy Birthday John O'Brien, who is the brother of our dear Major Todd!

 

:happybirthday2::happybirthday::happybirthday3:

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  Doctor turns serial killer in Paris - WWII
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 11-10-2011, 09:22 AM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - No Replies


By Elaine Lies

 

TOKYO (Reuters) - Nazi-occupied Paris was a terrible place to be in the waning days of World War Two, with Jews, Resistance fighters and ordinary citizens all hoping to escape. Disappearances became so common they often weren't followed up.

 

And one man used the lawlessness for his own terrible purposes, killing perhaps as many as 150 people.

 

Yet it wasn't until thick black smoke seeped into buildings in a fashionable part of the city that firefighters and police were called to an elegant townhouse where they found body parts scattered around -- setting off a manhunt that led them, eventually, to Marcel Petiot.

 

The crime was very much of its time, said David King, who chronicled the hunt for Petiot in "Death in the City of Light." (click link to see book on Amazon.com)

 

"Paris was not a good place to be. A lot of people were trying to leave Paris, a lot of people just disappearing. He had it plotted out, a very devious plan," said King, in a telephone interview.

 

"Respect for the law was tarnished under the Nazis. Even if you suspected something, a lot of people were very, very reluctant to go forward, especially if they were Jewish."

 

Petiot, as it turned out, was a respected physician who turned serial killer by night, preying largely on Jews desperate to leave Paris by luring them in with promises of escape. He was accused of murduring "only" some 27, but authorities suspected his real toll was far higher.

 

King, a former history professor, first stumbled across reference to the killings while browsing in a bookstore and picking up a World War Two memoir by a spy. At first, he couldn't believe what he read.

But the grisly details stuck with him, and after he confirmed the story was true, he finished his other projects and came back to it.

 

"Here's a guy -- Marcel Petiot, who was accused of all the murders. Obviously very intelligent, charismatic, has a respected position, is into collecting antiques, interested in the arts," he said.

 

"And yet, you get to the other side, when he's accused of some of the most disturbing things you can think of: savagely dismembering bodies."

Through years of research, including perusal of Parisian police archives closed since the crimes took place, King pieced together the story of how Petiot claimed to be a member of the resistance and lured many of his victims in by promising them safe passage to South America in return for payment.

 

Once in Petiot's hands, the victims were told to write letters to their relatives, telling them that they were fine and would return once times had settled down. Then they were killed, most likely by lethal gas, and dismembered or burned.

 

"It's a microcosm of the whole Nazi terror and Paris being a bad place to be. There's got to be more than just exploiting peoples' hopes and dreams and desperation, but that's what he does," King said.

 

Though Petiot eluded police on at least one occasion, after appearing amid the crowd that gathered after the initial grisly discovery and speaking with a patrolman before riding off on his bicycle, he was eventually captured, tried and executed.

King, the author of several other books, said this one was particularly hard to immerse himself in due to the content, however horrifically fascinating the story.

 

It also had an impact on him personally.

 

"I'm generally a pretty outgoing person, but I'm probably a little bit more reluctant about things now," he said.

 

"Dr. Petiot seemed like the nicest guy -- charming, intelligent, friendly. You could just strike up a conversation with somebody like this ... I found myself on my guard more."

 

(Reporting by Elaine Lies, editing by Paul Casciato)

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  Veterans Day 2011
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 11-08-2011, 06:36 PM - Forum: ALL Vets News - Replies (9)


Honoring Veterans this Veteran's Day - Friday, November 2011

post-2-0-95199200-1320788149_thumb.jpg



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  Forestry Units in Europe
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 11-06-2011, 07:45 PM - Forum: WWII ENGINEERS - Replies (9)

Hello Ms. Chard,

 

I am trying to locate records of my father's units with the Engineering Corps during WWII, especially in Europe, later Phillipines.Anything you can tell me is more than I know.

 

He is Leo Walter Zimmer, 36 895 965, 1-20-1943-12/22/1945. US Corps of Engineers. Pvt to t/5.

 

I am hoping you can give me info on the applicable forestry units that my father served with in WWII. I have only snippets of his units, although his over-riding role was with a forestry company in France. He drove heavy truck for 12months and was a carpenter for 9 months per service record. Here is what I know of the units for which I seek info:

796th Engineering Forestry Battalion. He was with them when he made t/5. I think in France.

1391st Engineering Forestry Division at one point. I think in France.

1063D Engineering Forestry Division at discharge. He was in the Phillipines with some (this?) unit after VE Day.

At discharge per DD-214 he wore 3rd Army patch on right shoulder; 6th Army patch on left shoulder.

 

Locations/timing I know of:

Jan 24, 1944 with the 1532nd S.U., Fort Sheridan, Ill.

May 1, 1944 - end of basic, early June. Camp Clairborne, LA per photo.

June - July 3/4 1944 Camp White on Rogue River, Medford or Ashland, Oregon per photos.

July 20, 1944 in England. Worked on pontoons for D-Day follow-up. Do not know when he got to England, but sometime in July, after the 4th.Per letter home.

Early August 1944 went to Cherborg, France.His first night in France was in Cherborg.Per letter home.

Sept 1944 wrote home from France.

October 1944 per a local radio announcement, "Zimmer is with the sawdust commandoos in France, under CO 1st LT Morris C. Reeve CE of Edwardsport, Indiana". It was labeled "Black boots deliver logs to Engineers to build."

October 23, 1944 in France with a Sgt Zumwalt per photo

December 1944 in Nancy, going up to Bastogne-area attached to Patton's 3rd Army per Dad.

Spent two months in Belguim, with Engineers staying/based at a monestary per Dad. Not sure if this was in 1944 (pre Nancy) or early 1945 after Bastogne.

Medals per DD-214 and letter from 1st LT James D. Barclay CE dtd 11Nov1945: Legion of Merit; Unit Meritorious Service Plaque; American Campaign w/star; Asia/Pacific Campaign; European/Africa Campaign w/4 battle stars (Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland, Central Germany); Phillipine Occupation Medal w/star.

No idea whatsoever about Legion of Merit but it was a well-worn ribbon so think it came from Europe, not Phillipines where he was training to clear mines on Japan's beaches.

If you can fill in any blanks it would be more than I know now. His units must have been small enough that they don't pop-up on searches for them. I do think they wee TAD to other units.

 

Thank you,

Bob Zimmer

Like my father, a proud combat veteran,

Mobile Riverine Force Vietnam, USN

as XO, USS Mercer (APB-39)

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